Subscribe by Email

Your email:
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Youtube Google+ Inbound Marketing Blog

Inbound Marketing Agency Blog

Current Articles | RSS Feed RSS Feed

There is an I (and a Me) in Inbound Marketing

 

In putting together a solid inbound marketing strategy, we usually focus on building relationships with potential customers by giving away valuable information and offers. We put ourselves in our customers' shoes and ask "what's in it for me?" Then we give them what they want, convert them to leads and nurture them into customers.  But when we put our own shoes back on, the same question applies. What's in it for me, the inbound marketer, and my company?

Direct Impact on the Bottom Line

inbound marketing what's in it for meAssuming that you follow the inbound marketing mantra of consistently publishing great content, engaging in social media, optimizing for search and nurturing leads you should see:

  1. Increased volume of qualified sales leads
  2. Increased conversion rates from lead to customer
  3. Increased direct sales via e-commerce (if available)
  4. Improved customer retention rates
  5. Increased repeat sales from current customers

Performance metrics depend on the amount, frequency and quality of the content you create and the use of social media channels for communication and support. Much depends on how committed your organization is to inbound marketing as a strategy and using social media as a natural tool to communicate with customers and co-workers.

Brand Awareness

Inbound Marketing will have the most immediate effect on brand awareness. Every time someone visits your website, reads your blogs, subscribes to your feeds, signs up for your free downloads and webinars or follows you on one of your social network venues, you have helped to cement your brand in their subconscious. Each time that happens, you are one step closer to gaining a new customer. You can monitor brand awareness over time via:

  1. Website traffic
  2. Search engine optimization and analysis
  3. Real-time search metrics
  4. Social media monitoring

Brand Reputation

Brand awareness is just half the battle. As your footprint becomes larger, you will get more feedback. That's what you want, to start a conversation and build a relationship with potential and existing customers. These conversations will happen with or without your presence. Successful companies monitor social media channels and respond to all kinds of questions and comments. Many of them use tools such as Twitter for customer service, which helps to funnel customer feedback into a single channel. Benefits of participation in social media include:

  1. Improved customer satisfaction and retention rate
  2. Quick and pervasive response to positive and negative feedback
  3. Building a community of brand supporters (and virtual sales reps)
  4. Competitive edge over companies that are less involved

So, next time your boss, your investors or your co-workers express their doubts about the value of inbound marketing and social media, rattle off these bullet points. Then, show them your data.

Any questions?

Photo credit:

 


Comments

Great bullet point list there, I'll be certain to make use of it!
Posted @ Friday, April 30, 2010 9:32 AM by Andy @ FirstFound
Thanks Andy. Wow, you're in the U.K.? Must be the right around cocktail hour? Have a great weekend. John
Posted @ Friday, April 30, 2010 9:44 AM by John McTigue
What I especially enjoy reading about your Direct Impact on the Bottom Line bullet points is they highlight how inbound marketing and social media impact the Big 3 business problems: (1) increasing revenues, (2) decreasing costs, or (3) improving customer satisfaction. And, if you have the data to back things up, you've moved a major step forward in gaining buy-in and adoption of inbound marketing principles in any type of organization (large or small). 
 
 
 
As always John, fantastic and insightful commentary here - Thank You.
Posted @ Saturday, May 01, 2010 12:56 PM by Tony Faustino
Well, I am the guy who was expressing doubts about the value of inbound marketing, so I am glad you wrote this.  
 
Chef Steve
Posted @ Saturday, May 01, 2010 2:12 PM by Stephen Pazyra
Most of those who express doubts about social media marketing are lackluster participants at best anyway, and they always need more convincing. 
 
 
 
I have commented on another thread today about explaining Twitter as Search Engine which feeds across your iGoogle or LinkedIn page, providing content, saving steps and as an effieciency tool. The delivery in how we explain social media has to evolve over time, we have to get better at it, we have to provide real world examples that managers and staff can understand.  
 
 
 
The low start up costs, combined with the natural viral aspect of Social Media is often under analyzed. I have an intern who works at a 200 employee business as her day job. Just this week, all employees were compelled to join LinkedIn. But without the proper training to say, Participate in Discussions, To Post Twitter URLs on those comments, to invite others to one's network, then being on LinkedIn is no more productive than any other network. It's only value comes from participation. 
 
 
 
Corporations, businesses and associations don't change. It is the people, the personell and staff that changes their habits, their commitments and their focus. To participate is a journey, not a destination.  
 
 
 
In order to establish a better hold of the "direct impact to bottom line" a popular trend is specialty "landing pages". So if someone hit's my link for Twitter, I have a special landing page just for them. Same is true for fb, or LinkedIn Users. So this way, I am establishing A. Trust they identify with me, they see the same profile on all my stuff B. Identification with the larger Brand I am piggybacking, fb, Twitter, LinkedIn, etc. C. That I can point out specifically areas which need to be worked on. D. I can report results as a "Bottom Line" with accuracy and specificity, which is generally lacking in most strategies. This particular strategy shouldn't be implemented just because Nike, Coke and ABC News does it, but because it's smart marketing, cheap, and effective. 
 
 
 
I really loved your bullet points, you write well, with short, easy to digest articles with crisp paragraphs, and you keep moving along. I'd like to have you guest blog a piece or two, or whenever you want, and just send me the copy, we'll get it up there for you and you can even start your own threads.  
 
 
 
I tweet atwww.twitter.com/ProDevNetworker 
 
Author/Writer/Small Business Success Coach 
 
and Free Internet "Tips" guy.... 
 
 
 
Posted @ Sunday, May 02, 2010 5:44 PM by Lonny Dunn
Zack, Tony, Stephen, Lonny, 
 
Great comments all. Clearly the word has spread, but we are in the early stages of convincing CEO's. As more case studies emerge here and elsewhere, there will be much more ammunition. Meanwhile it would behoove any business owner or executive to get up to speed on Marketing 2.0. Many people think we are at a tipping point in Marketing and we'll never be going back to the push tactics of 1950-2005. To me the unique thing going on is that consumers seem to be driving the change, not technology. In fact, technology is having a hard time keeping up with the demand for social networking. Interesting times...
Posted @ Monday, May 03, 2010 7:25 AM by John McTigue
John; 
As the comments have already said - a great post, thanks for sharing! 
Your list of bullet points is excellent and I believe accurate and attainable. But along with the tools and techniques, one has to develop a process for Inbound Marketing. 
The process of implementing an Inbound Marketing Automation system must be based on a comprehensive marketing strategy developed expressly for Inbound Marketing. And then, to design the Process you will use the tools and techniques within, it often helps to divide your overall Inbound Marketing Automation Process into 4 sub-processes: 
1) Attract more visitors to your website through SEO, Social Media Marketing, and, if needed, PPC 
2) Engage their attention with industry leading content (website copy, white papers, videos, podcasts) 
3) Convert them by getting their names and email addresses in return for valued content. Grade their profiles (each time they visit ask them a few more questions) and score their digital footprints (their activities on the site), to rack up points. Keep them in your funnel by automatically nurturing them around their buying cycle, educating them automatically with multi-touch drip email campaigns cultivating them from cold lead to hot prospect. 
4) And when their Grade and Score reach your target levels, automatically feed these prospects directly into your CRM and notify the assigned sales rep (based on product or territory or whatever…). Your sales reps will love this part – no more cold calls as they person they call knows them from the emails, and the sales person knows the prospect from the Profile and activity on site. 
For those who would like to explore the 4 steps above in more detail, our website contains a library of white papers, tools, videos and an extensive glossary. 
www.inbound-marketing-automation.ca 
Posted @ Tuesday, May 04, 2010 5:17 PM by Eric Goldman
Eric, 
 
Not to quibble, but I think your #1 and #2 are two parts of the same process. You can't attract people to your website without good content, and SEO etc all roll from there. I like your #3 especially, interesting about automatically feeding them into #4 once criteria are met. What if the lead is ready to go right away? Could they get turned off by the repeated automated responses. Why not go directly from landing page to CRM and let the sales person decide? Tough to automate since a salesperson's judgement could be base on non-obvious stuff like what company, what website, what industry etc. I have yet to see a decision-making CRM like that, but I will check out yours. Thanks for the response.
Posted @ Tuesday, May 04, 2010 5:28 PM by John McTigue
Comments have been closed for this article.